Was away since last Thursday and read all the comments about 2.8 kHz SSB bandwidth. This reminded me of a question I had about Orion. You can adjust the TX SSB bandwidth from 900 Hz to 3900 Hz (I ass
Narrowing TX bandwidth depends on the operators voice. One of the hams across town is a good judge of voices and very familiar with my "coffee shop conversation." Experimenting back and forth we find
In addition to the question of how one would measure this operation, it is also true that the signal power is not uniformly distributed within whichever bandwidth is chosen. The lower frequencies req
For sake of argument, assume my TX bandwidth is set to 1800 Hz. If I am transmitting my 1500 watts into an 1800 Hz BW, does this mean I would be 3 dB stronger than someone transmitting his 1500 watts
Yuri, Make that BOB Heil. Dave Heil was doing your cartoons. Dave K8MN _______________________________________________ TenTec mailing list TenTec@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/li
Yuri, Make that BOB Heil. Dave Heil was doing your cartoons. Dave K8MN _______________________________________________ << Yes, sorry, that's right Bob Heil, K9EID of Heil Radio. Dave Heil, K8MN did t
OOOps, here I go again, make it "Heiluwa Heils" :-) Oh well! _______________________________________________ TenTec mailing list TenTec@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/ten
AC5E commented "And by the way, kudos to Ten Tec for the speech processor, which provides very natural audio even at the higher compression numbers. . . with no loss of audio quality at the other end
Well, it's certainly possible to get poor TX audio out of the Orion, but having a fellow within eyeball range - yet far enough away so his rig's not overloaded - critique your audio does help. After